Weather Underground Forecast for Tuesday,March 8,2016
An active weather pattern will impact the south central portion of the country on Tuesday, while high pressure builds over the Southeast.
A low pressure system will lift north northeastward over the northern Plains and the upper Midwest. This system will usher a mixture of rain and snow across the Dakotas, northern Minnesota and the upper Great Lakes. Freezing rain will be possible in northwest Minnesota. A cold frontal boundary associated with this system will stretch south southwestward from the northern Plains to the southern high Plains. This frontal system will collide with a warm and muggy air mass, which will generate widespread rain and thunderstorms across the middle Mississippi Valley, the lower Mississippi Valley, the central Plains and the southern Plains. Severe thunderstorms are forecast to impact central and eastern Texas, Oklahoma, southwest Arkansas and western Louisiana. These thunderstorms will be capable of producing large hail, dangerous straight line winds and isolated tornadoes. In addition, heavy rain will bring threats of flash flooding to southwest Missouri, western Arkansas, western Louisiana, eastern Texas and eastern Oklahoma. High pressure over the Southeast will keep the majority of the Eastern Seaboard dry on Tuesday. Temperatures will be 10 to 25 degrees above normal across the Mid-Atlantic and the Northeast.
Meanwhile, an onshore flow from the Pacific will produce moderate rain and high elevation snow across northern California, the Pacific Northwest and parts of the upper Intermountain West.
An active weather pattern will impact the south central portion of the country on Tuesday, while high pressure builds over the Southeast.
A low pressure system will lift north northeastward over the northern Plains and the upper Midwest. This system will usher a mixture of rain and snow across the Dakotas, northern Minnesota and the upper Great Lakes. Freezing rain will be possible in northwest Minnesota. A cold frontal boundary associated with this system will stretch south southwestward from the northern Plains to the southern high Plains. This frontal system will collide with a warm and muggy air mass, which will generate widespread rain and thunderstorms across the middle Mississippi Valley, the lower Mississippi Valley, the central Plains and the southern Plains. Severe thunderstorms are forecast to impact central and eastern Texas, Oklahoma, southwest Arkansas and western Louisiana. These thunderstorms will be capable of producing large hail, dangerous straight line winds and isolated tornadoes. In addition, heavy rain will bring threats of flash flooding to southwest Missouri, western Arkansas, western Louisiana, eastern Texas and eastern Oklahoma. High pressure over the Southeast will keep the majority of the Eastern Seaboard dry on Tuesday. Temperatures will be 10 to 25 degrees above normal across the Mid-Atlantic and the Northeast.
Meanwhile, an onshore flow from the Pacific will produce moderate rain and high elevation snow across northern California, the Pacific Northwest and parts of the upper Intermountain West.
No comments:
Post a Comment